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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to offer an intensive study of an area of speech communication that is not currently covered extensively by existing courses. Some of the topics which may be covered include "Family Communication," "Narrative Communication, ?olitical Rhetoric," and "Communication Skills anTheories for the Healthcare Professional." Prerequisites: SCS 101 and SCS 205. 3 credits. AY
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3.00 Credits
Supervised clinical practice in the treatment of speech and language disorders will be provided to qualified students. Prerequisites: SCS 361, 368, 369, 372, and permission of department chair. 3 credits. F
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3.00 Credits
Supervised clinical practice in the treatment of speech and language disorders will be provided to qualified students. Capstone course. Prerequisite: SCS 418, permission of department chair, and senior standing. 3 credits. S
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the principles and methods of sociology. Topics include: society and culture socialization, family, social stratification, race and ethnicity, deviance and social control. Not open to students who have taken SOC 101, SOC 2401 or SOC 3500. 4 credits. Y
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3.00 Credits
Examines social issues and public policy in American society. Topics include urbanization, sexual and racial inequalities, family problems, crime and delinquency, drugs and alcohol, health care, aging and pollution. Not open to students who have taken SOC 102. 4 credits. S
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4.00 Credits
An interdisciplinary course offering new approaches to the history, culture and social experience of African Americans. While focused primarily on the black experience in the United States, Afro Caribbean issues will also be addressed. An overview of the participation, treatment and status of blacks in the institutions of the family, education, politics and the economy will be provided. Same course as CDS 2300. 4 credits. N
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4.00 Credits
This course, which includes 26 half-hour television programs, presents the basic concepts of culture, including subsistence patterns, organizing devices, patterns for transmission of culture, economics, political organization, social control, and culture change. Methods of anthropological research and major theoretical orientations are also described, and examples of cultural variations are shown, including traditional and modern societies. Attention is given to examining one's own culture from an anthropological perspective. Not open to students who have taken SOC 2414. Same course as CDS 2400. 4 credits. N
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4.00 Credits
This video course is an introduction to sociology. The course has 30 half-hour video programs. They are organized to deal with the principles and methods of sociology. This course covers the following content areas: society and culture, socialization, groups, institutions, and social change. Not open to students who have taken SOC 101, SOC 1010, or SOC 3500. Same course as CDS 2401. 4 credits. N
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4.00 Credits
A study of the scope and principles of anthropology; human origins and primitive cultures; development of social organization, language, cultural institutions and personality. Not open to students who have taken SOC 314 or SOC 2400. 4 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
A study of classic and modern social theories. Classical theorists such as Marx, Durkheim, Simmel and Weber will be studied along with the modern theoretical approaches of functionalism, symbolic interactionism, conflict theory and ethnomethodology. These theories will be tested against modern principles of the logic of theory construction. Prerequisite: SOC 101 or 102. 3 credits. F
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